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... aind the ?? schiolars wilt be delighted with thes re- mniniscences ccl 1 Westmninster school, aind of which Part I. is ?? Whig Government is very effee- tively handled in ?? T'l'l Collapse, am1 ?? Principles amnd I-csues of time American Struggle, ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... liked to believe that a visible instrument was forthcoming in the Radical Candidate who had pronounced emphatically against Whig finality. Felix, being in a perverse mood, contended that universal suffrage would ea 'qdally agweeable to the devil'; thatbe ...

LITERATURE

... breed, you ?? answer for the Lingons. In the old Tory times there was never a pap belonging to a Lingon but would howl if a Whig came near him. The in gon blood is good, rich, old Tory blood-like good rich milk; and that's why, when the right time comes ...

LITERATURE

... numnber of t Ri'n. 'Zi~s.,2od has lost its interest fromn the fact that it was sJC os-rit t n be foro the r'nlp s s of t he Whig Government. It a1 contains, howtever, a very abl e reviewv of the causes which led C to the wvreck of the flefors hill, and ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... EARL'S QUE~ST. Thoro wee an earl of anclent bloed, Of the antlquo temper too; / *hiof of the race old Tores, Heotrled the -WhIgs to woe; And tio name of toi earl was8fanley, Witr Smith prefixed thereto. Ho tried tlio gentle Granville, Who all men think ...

VARIETIES

... wrote on the same r. day to the Dluke of Wellington to congratulate hins Oti the sot alvation of the Constitution from thee Whigs, and to Lord Oln Grey, to condole with him on. its pending destruction by 'he the Tories, and enclosed the letters iu the wrong ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... power, and that of those who thought with him, may have been especially inviting. A lasting occupation of office, such as the Whigs enjoyed after the death of Queen Anne, and the Tories after Fox's India Bill, in which the schemes of an all-powerful Minister ...

LITERATURE

... Toryism consists. He approved the revo- lution settlement, and he cherished no more regard for the Pretender than any moderate Whig. Probablys as a gen- tleman of a Jacobite county (Berwickshire), he may have had a little more sentiment on such subjects than ...

THE QUARTERLY REVIEW ON MR. GLADSTONE

... de& own power, and that of those aho thougbh with him, may have hbeu ?? 2vitong. A lasting occupation of 'dfite, snub as the Whigs rjnjed after the death of Qoeea Arne,ard ?? ?? Bill, in wnich the subemee of an all-powerful. Minister swould not be menaced ...

LITERATURE

... , in' the article on! ~'lhe!Change' of' ?? of; Mr Gladstone's favourite,.measuie,,f Rifor,, and the -dowv~nfall of, .the Whig~ Admnistr~itbon?, the pol~itital winter o~f the ..Qaarterly doeye so~with s ome. misgivings. ( He is not iery'eureathat the ...